Breakfast Serials: The British kids' anthology series featured a segment called "Nicechap" about a very nice comic character who twice came to life as a very nice man who spoke in rhyme. Unfortunately, after he retuned to being a drawing for the second time, his creator drew big heavy eyebrows on him in a fit of anger. Then Nicechap came back to life for a third time, and this time he was evil.

Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Spike. Made worse by the fact that they're a wildly different color than his platinum-blonde hair. Hell, just look at the picture up on the Badass Decay page.

Degrassi: The Next Generation: Manny Santos saw Jane Vaughn swoon over Declan Coyne and asked her, "Who's Johnny Eyebrows?" His actor said he stopped reading YouTube comments of the show promos when the first one was "Eyebrow tweezers. Heard of them?" There's also Sean Cameron. Though his eyebrows are not as big as some of the other examples here, it's lampshaded nonetheless.

Doctor Who: The Twelfth Doctor was literally introduced eyebrows first, as pictured above. The quote below them comes from his debut story "Deep Breath"; he also calls them "attack eyebrows" in the scene in question. Having become his defining physical characteristic, comments about the brows come up often in both the show and the Expanded Universe. When asked why he's the one in charge of the "Time Heist", he says "Basically, it's the eyebrows." In "Face the Raven", Clara cites them as a reason he can never be the good cop in a Good Cop/Bad Cop situation. In Doctor Who Legacy his most powerful skill — it unleashes tons of damage on enemies — is dubbed "Attack Eyebrows".

Game of Thrones: Little Arya Stark's noticeable eyebrows which are growing as she ages have not gone unnoticed by the viewers. Daenerys Targaryen's no slouch on the eyebrow department either, mostly because of their expressiveness and prominence and how, like Spike's, they are a good shade darker than her blonde-silver-white hair, standing out strongly, although from Season 1 to 3 her eyebrows are a fair grey like her brother. The make-up artists decided to forego this whitening of Emilia's naturally dark boarders halfway through Season 4 with the justification that Dany asked her handmaids to apply Dothraki khol in remembrance of her husband once she started to rule Meereen. By the time she returns to Westeros, the natural light colour is beginning to show thorough again. Isaac Hempstead-Wright (Arya's brother Bran) is also growing these as he gets older.

Community

Tropes HQ

TVTropes is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available from thestaff@tvtropes.org. Privacy Policy